Wednesday, March 16, 2011

What Is New In One Button 2-Way Voice Pendant Personal Emergency Systems? Touch-N-Talk!

PRLog (Press Release)– Mar 08, 2011– Touch-N-Talk has a pendant that can be 600 feet from the base station and still provide clear  2-way voice communication.  If the pendant didn't provide 2-way voice communication you would have to shout and try to listen to the base station over two football fields away.  

If an emergency occurs you just press the one button on the pendant and your call for help starts.  Then you just talk and listen through the pendant like you would with a phone.

You can also choose who is called in an emergency.  with Touch-N-Talk you have the option of specifying up to four numbers plus 911 to be called in an emergency.

Longest Range In The Industry - No Monthly Fees - Speak Into The Pendant and Talk With Anyone In The Event Of An Emergency - Wear It In The Shower, it's Waterproof ! You MUST see this !!!

FOLLOW THIS LINK FOR MORE INFORMATION

http://www.thefreedomalertpendant.com

< p>Freedom Alert - NEW - 2 Way Voice Communication Pendant Medical Alert Alarm.

SAY GOODBYE to MONTHLY FEES FOREVER !!!!

- Waterproof Pendant (wear it in the shower) - - 600 foot range - - Rechargeable batteries included - Battery backup in the event of a power failure - Pacemaker Safe - 1 Year Warranty - 2 Way Voice Communication Through The Pendant - - NO MONTHLY FEES - - Calls the numbers you want and NOT a Monitoring Service - Wear it on your wrist, belt clip, around your neck or attach it to your walker or wheelchair.

The NEW Freedom Alert Medical Alert system has all the features seniors have been waiting for.

- No Monthly Fees - 600 Foot Range - Talk right through the speakerphone like using a cordless phone - Wear it in the shower

What if there was a no monthly fee medical alert system with a waterproof pendant with a 600 foot range? Why would anyone not want their loved one to have one?

The worlds first no monthly fee medical alert system with a waterproof pendant that you can actually talk through just like a cordless phone.

- 600 foot range - Calls the numbers that you want it to call in the event of an emergency (friends, family or even 911) - Waterproof pendant you can shower with - No monthly fee to use it. Buy the system and it is yours forever and there is never another charge to use it.


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Saturday, March 12, 2011

Emergency Medical Dialer - One Button 2-Way Voice Pendant - 6 0 0 Foot Range - One Time Payment

PRLog (Press Release)– Mar 08, 2011– The advanced technology Touch-N-Talk uses allows you to stay active, be happier and stay independent longer.

With Touch-N-Talk you can roam up to 600 feet from the base station and still have clear two way voice communication. The pendant is sturdy and water resistant. The lightweight pendant can easily be worn around the neck on a lanyard or attached with a belt clip. When trouble happens you just press the button then talk and listen through the pendant.  With Touch-N-Talk you don't have to scream.

Plus you control who is called.  You can choose up to 4 numbers and/or 911 to be dialed in an emergency.

Since Touch-N-Talk is available for an affordable one-time payment you have no monthly fees.  Thats like making money.

This Small device is easy to use, and can be programmed to your specifications.

http://www.buythefreedomalert.com

< p>What if there was a no monthly fee medical alert system with a waterproof pendant with a 600 foot range? Why would anyone not want their loved one to have one?

The worlds first no monthly fee medical alert system with a waterproof pendant that you can actually talk through just like a cordless phone.

- 600 foot range - Calls the numbers that you want it to call in the event of an emergency (friends, family or even 911) - Waterproof pendant you can shower with - No monthly fee to use it. Buy the system and it is yours forever and there is never another charge to use it.

Why pay $29-$49 each month for a system when you don't have to?

This system will work with a normal telephone line or VOIP phone lines.

Works in Canada and most other countries.

Has a battery backup so there is always a connection to your phone line.

Free yourself with the Freedom Alert

Free from Monthly Fees Free yourself to roam up to 600 feet away from the base unit Free yourself to carry this with you in the shower, on your wrist, in a belt clip or on the arm of a wheelchair.

http://www.buythefreedomalert.com

- No Monthly Fees - 600 Foot Range - Talk right through the speakerphone like using a cordless phone - Wear it in the shower


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Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Panic 911 Dialer W/ 2-Way Voice Pendant : You Choose Up To Four Numbers And/Or 911

PRLog (Press Release)– Mar 08, 2011– FALL-N-CALL from GSS uses advanced technology to allow the lightweight pendant to be up to 600 feet from the base station and still have crystal clear 2-way voice communication.  This allows you to roam around your house and property.  You aren't tied to short range anymore.  You can watch the kids play.  Enjoy your garden again.

Not only do you get great range, you get to choose who is called in an emergency situation.  You can program in up to 4 numbers and/or 911.  

FALL-N-CALL is just a one time payment.  No monthly fees!

Considering the average Senior Spends OVER $400.00 EVERY Year for a monthly-fee based medical alert.  You can save a lot of money with the FALL-N-CALL solution.

Click here to find out more: http://www.globalseniorsolutions.com/testimonials.htm?id ... ... OR CALL TOLL FREE #866-961-3714

In addition a one-time LOW PRICE $279.95 - the ALL NEW FALL-N-CALL Medical Alert offers peace-of-mind 24 hours a day - 7 days a week - 365 days per year!

Finally - Savings, Technology, Value, and Ease-of-Installation have all come together for one smart package! FALL-N-CALL Medical Alert - Talk Thru - LightWeight - No Monthly Fe

* Press 1-Blue Button and you're immediately connected to Loved One or 911 (up to 4 pre-programmed numbers) * Water Resistant - Shower Ready * Comes with Wrist strap, Lanyard and Belt clip * No Monthly Fees * Can program for Loved Ones, 911, or both * Also - LifeTime Warranty is available - See site * It even calls you and informs you when the battery is getting low - WOW!

ORDER NOW: http://www.globalseniorsolutions.com OR CALL TOLL FREE #866-961-3714

Just ONE FEE and then IT's FREE. . . . "for the entire LIFE of the user."


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Capitol Lighting Offering Discounts on Various Lighting Fixtures, Including Kitchen Lighting, & More

PRLog (Press Release)– Mar 08, 2011– Boca Raton, Fla.  – Is your 70's bathroom with gold bath vanity lights making you blue? Have you had enough with your dingy kitchen lighting? Fall in love with your kitchen and bath again with new lighting fixtures from Capitol Lighting's Love your Kitchen & Bath Event going on now until March 31, 2010.

Capitol Lighting, one of the nation's leading retailers of name-brand lighting fixtures with eight showrooms in New Jersey and Florida and worldwide at www.1-800lighting.com, is offering great savings of up to 70% off select Kitchen and Bath Lighting fixtures in its showrooms, as well as a coupon for $25 off a purchase of $90. This exclusive, in-store coupon is only available through social media and can be downloaded from the company's Facebook page at www.Facebook.com/CapitolLighting1800Lighting.

"We pride ourselves in our knowledgeable staff and vast lighting showrooms," said Eric Lebersfeld, president of Capitol Lighting. "We wanted to offer this promotion to encourage our customers to come in, see what lighting fixture options are available to update their kitchen lighting and bath vanity lighting, and to talk to one of our trained lighting professionals for advice on everything from placement of lighting fixtures to the best "green" lighting available."

With thousands of bath vanity and kitchen lighting options from top kitchen and bath lighting manufacturers such as Quoizel Lighting, Minka Lavery, and Savoy House, Capitol Lighting - in store or online - is the most comprehensive one-stop shop for all your lighting fixture needs.

About Capitol Lighting and 1-800lighting.com

For more than 85 years, the lighting experts at Capitol Lighting have helped customers find the perfect lighting fixtures from the largest selection of lighting – from Hinkley Lighting products to Minka Lavery fixtures and more - at the most affordable prices available.

The company's eight lighting fixture showrooms are the offspring of a family retailing tradition that dates back to 1924, when Max Lebersfeld, an electrical contractor and immigrant from Austria-Hungary, opened a light fixture store in Newark, N.J. Four generations later, Capitol Lighting has expanded the concept to four locations in New Jersey, four in southeast Florida and worldwide online at 1-800Lighting.com.

Among their many awards, the readers of New Jersey Monthly magazine recently voted Capitol Lighting as the "Best of New Jersey 2010" for "Where to Shop for Lighting." Additionally, peers and fellow industry professionals have nominated Capitol Lighting for the seventh time for the prestigious ARTS Award for "Best Lighting Showroom" in the East Atlantic.

To find the best prices on your personal lighting project, or to request a quote for your next commercial lighting project, please visit Capitol Lighting's website at www.1800lighting.com or call 1-800-544-4846.

Visit Capitol Lighting on Facebook at www.facebook.com/CapitolLighting1800Lighting and Twitter at www.Twitter.com/1800Lighting. You'll see great information and receive special offers and coupons for bath vanity lights, kitchen lighting solutions and more!

Eric Lebersfeld Capitol Lighting East Hanover, NJ 561-994-9570 x 44


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Sunday, March 6, 2011

Radical Venezuelan pro-Chavez leader Lina Ron dies

Chavez praised her as "true soldier of the people." In a Twitter post, Chavez said: "A Complete Revolutionary. Let's follow her example!"

Information Minister Andres Izarra confirmed Ron's death, saying she had no vital signs when she arrived at a Caracas hospital. "Honor and glory to Lina Ron," Izarra said on Twitter.

Ron led groups of Chavez supporters that were involved in attacks on opposition protests, and she repeatedly said she would take up arms if necessary to defend Chavez and his socialist movement.

With platinum-blond hair and a tough-talking nature, Ron soon became a household name in Venezuela within the first few years after Chavez took office in 1999. She founded the small political party Venezuelan Popular Union and was for years a prominent voice in the radical wing of Chavez's movement.

Ron's supporters mourned her death in a Caracas plaza on Saturday, some holding the flags of her political party.

Chavez once said Ron was "a good woman, but she tends toward anarchy."

The president publicly opposed some of her tactics. She faced various charges related to her involvement in disturbances.

In 2009, a court upheld criminal charges against Ron including assault and illegal use of a firearm for her role in an attack in which her group hurled tear gas canisters at the studios of the television station Globovision. She also led a group that stormed and temporarily occupied the offices of the Vatican's representative in Caracas in 2008.

In an earlier protest that drew widespread criticism, she burned a U.S. flag shortly after the 9/11 terrorist attack.

In a 2002 interview with The Associated Press, Ron described herself as a "social fighter."

"I'm the ugly part of the process, the one who gets the disagreeable part — confronting" Chavez's enemies, Ron said.

Some government opponents have said Ron was useful for Chavez in that she and her allies would regularly intimidate members of the opposition while government officials publicly distanced themselves from her.


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NASA satellite rocket launch fails, lands in ocean

The Taurus XL rocket carrying NASA's Glory satellite lifted off early Friday morning from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, but fell to the sea several minutes later. The same thing happened to another climate-monitoring satellite two years ago with the same type of rocket.

"We failed to make orbit," NASA launch director Omar Baez said at a press conference Friday. "Indications are that the satellite and rocket ... is in the southern Pacific Ocean somewhere."

Officials explained that a protective shell atop the rocket didn't come off the satellite as it should have about three minutes after launch. That left the Glory spacecraft without the velocity to reach orbit.

The 2009 failed satellite, which would have studied global warming, crashed into the ocean near Antarctica. Officials said Glory likely wound up landing in the same area. Both were on Taurus rockets launched by Orbital Sciences Corporation of Dulles, Va.

NASA has already started a board to investigate the mishap. The next NASA Earth sciences launch on a Taurus rocket is scheduled for 2013 but the space agency can still change launch vehicles if the Taurus proves unreliable, NASA Earth Science Director Mike Freilich told The Associated Press.

"I don't know if that's necessary or not," Freilich said. "We're not going to fly on a vehicle in which we don't have confidence."

The $424 million mission is managed by the NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland. NASA paid Orbital about $54 million to launch Glory, according to Orbital spokesman Barron Beneski. The Taurus rocket has launched nine times, six of them successfully.

NASA and Orbital spent more than a year studying and trying to fix the problem that caused 2009's Orbiting Carbon Observatory to fail. The payload fairing — a clamshell-shaped protective covering for the satellite — did not open to release the satellite.

The same thing happened with Glory, officials said.

"We really went into the (Glory) flight feeling we had nailed the fairing issue," said Ronald Grabe, general manager of Orbital's launch systems division and a former space shuttle commander.

Orbital officials said they redesigned the system used to trigger the removal of the protective covering and a similar system worked three times in other Orbital rockets, not the Taurus. There are different weight and size issues with the Taurus rocket.

Had Glory reached orbit it would have been on a three-year mission to analyze how airborne particles affect Earth's climate. The tiny atmospheric particles known as aerosols reflect and trap sunlight. The vast majority occurs naturally, spewed by volcanoes, forest fires and desert storms. Aerosols can also come from manmade sources such as the burning of fossil fuel.

Glory would also have tracked solar radiation to determine the sun's effect on climate change.

For about a decade, scientists have complained of a decline in the study of Earth from space. NASA spent more money looking at other planets than it did at Earth in 2007. That same year, the National Academy of Sciences warned that NASA's study of Earth "is at great risk" with fewer missions than before and aging satellites.

NASA's Freilich said airplanes and other satellites can track climate change, though not as well. The solar radiation tracking is done by other older satellites and will continue, while a new proposed satellite, scheduled for launch by the end of the decade, can look for aerosols, he said in a telephone interview from Vandenberg.

The loss of Glory will mostly hurt projections and modeling of future climate change, he said.

"The NASA team does the things that are important, not necessarily the things that are easy," Freilich said. "Sometimes it takes more than one try at it."

Investigators spent several months testing hardware after the 2009 accident, interviewing engineers and reviewing data and documents. The probe did not find evidence of widespread testing negligence or management shortcomings, but NASA declined to release the full accident report, citing sensitive and proprietary information.


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Saturday, March 5, 2011

69-year-old jockey back in saddle

Brooks is a legend in the quarter horse world, still a competitive rider at age 69. He'd returned from injury before, but Wells seemed certain Brooks couldn't bounce back again, not after a horse fell on top of the jockey, breaking his pelvis and tearing his urethra.

"I said to myself and a couple of the riders, 'I'm afraid that will be it for ol' Roy,'" Wells recalled.

Brooks had other ideas.

Less than two days later, he was promising he'd return to racing. And sure enough, he was scheduled to ride in two races on Friday night as Remington Park opens its annual quarter horse meet.

"I don't feel any different than last year," Brooks told The Associated Press. "I have a bounce in my step that I didn't have three weeks ago. I'm not going to quit over an injury unless it's so bad that I can't get on a horse. I don't feel like I'm 69. I don't think of being that old. If you get to thinking you're too old, you've got to stop doing this."

Brooks began racing quarter horses in 1967, long before Oklahoma legalized pari-mutuel racing. He spent years riding at tracks in New Mexico and was about ready to retire when Remington Park opened in 1988 in Oklahoma City, 35 miles from his ranch in rural Blanchard. The chance to ride again in his home state rejuvenated his spirits.

He's never won a riding title at Remington Park — although he's consistently been near the top of the standings at Oklahoma's largest track — but he has won titles at Fair Meadows in Tulsa. He's thought to be the second-oldest quarter horse jockey in North America, behind 70-year-old Richard Rettele of Northville, Mich., who races only sparingly. Brooks and Rettele have become friends through the years.

It would be hard to find a more respected rider in the quarter horse community. Walk with Brooks in Remington Park and he's kept busy saying hello.

"He's such a good horseman," said Wells, a former trainer who used Brooks as a rider starting in 1971. "He really understands horses and he knows when to ask them and when to sit still. He's great at developing young horses, he's a hard worker — all the things you look for in a jockey."

Brooks had won the third race at Remington Park on May 15 and was aboard 2-year-old paint White Legged Cowboy for the fifth race. As horses were being waiting to be loaded into the starting gate, White Legged Cowboy reared up and, as he had been trained, Brooks pushed off the horse to get away from it. The horse lost its balance, however, began moving backward and fell on Brooks.

Brooks was hospitalized for several days and underwent surgery.

"I thought even after the broken pelvis, I could come back within two months," he said.

Instead, he spent a couple of weeks on crutches before his first setback. A screw inserted by doctors came loose, so Brooks was told to stay in bed or in a wheelchair for 30 days. By mid-July, he was back on crutches.

The first time he got back on a horse, he needed considerable assistance, but he wanted to try to get back in riding shape.

In mid-September, he had to endure another operation and doctors ordered him not to get on a horse for six weeks. But by that time, his goal was to ride on Nov. 15 in the $350,000 Black Gold Futurity at Will Rogers Downs in Claremore.

Brooks' son, Jimmy Brooks — who's also a veteran jockey — had qualified multiple horses for the event and trainer Eddie Willis wanted Roy Brooks to ride one of them, Freighttrain B, if he felt up to it.

"I accepted the mount, but I almost backed out," Roy Brooks said. "I didn't want to put the horse in jeopardy and for the owner, that's a lot of money to run at when you're not at 100 percent."

Willis had no such qualms.

"The owner of that horse, he did call me and said, 'Do you think Roy's ready?' How I responded to that was, 'If Roy wasn't ready, he'd tell me,'" Willis said. "That horse doesn't need much. All he needs is someone to set him still and let him run, and Roy is perfect for that. I had full confidence in him running good."

With medical clearance, Brooks rode two races on Nov. 14 before the Black Gold Futurity the next day. In the big race, Brooks guided 8-1 shot Freighttrain B to a win by a nose over the favorite.

"He's a legend," Willis said. "He's one of those kind that they ain't going to make them like him anymore, I don't think."

After the November races, Brooks decided to take it easy and let his body heal before returning to racing, and even now, he acknowledges "my fitness is still not there."

He's making a few concessions for his health. For a while, at least, he's not going to ride 2-year-olds — "They're always a little bit flighty," he said — and he's cutting down on his overall number of mounts. Four or five races per card, he said, "would be a lot."

Brooks always said he plans to ride in races when turns 70, which will happen in August. After that, he said, "we'll see what happens."

Trainers "still have confidence in me, which I'm proud of," he said. "I don't want to ride just to be riding. I want to win races."


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